Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

First-Of-Its-Kind Registry In B.C. Targets Under-The-Radar Condo Flippers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Feb, 2019 08:09 PM

    VICTORIA — The British Columbia government says it has launched Canada's first registry aimed at cracking down on pre-sale property flipping and tax evasion in B.C.'s real estate market.


    The Ministry of Finance says the Condo and Strata Assignment Integrity Register will improve fairness and transparency in property transactions.


    Finance Minister Carol James says in a news release that the register will take "real action to moderate the condo market," and is already starting to see results in Metro Vancouver.


    Condo developers will be required to securely gather and report the identity and citizenship of anyone completing a contract assignment in a project.


    A contract assignment occurs when a buyer sells, or "flips," their purchase contract of a condo to another buyer, often at a higher price, before construction of the building is complete.


    Currently flipping can occur without any oversight and the province says the practice has been a factor in raising real estate prices while facilitating tax evasion when capital gains and other taxes are not applied.


    "For too long, speculators and tax evaders have been taking advantage of loopholes in our real estate market, driving up prices and shutting British Columbians out of the market," James says in the news release.


    The finance ministry says it's unknown how many pre-sale property flips occur each year because the transactions aren't reported.


    Developers are now required to collect and record assignment information and file a report each quarter, with the first due April 30, covering the period from Jan. 1 to March 31, 2019.


    "The B.C. government will use this information to ensure that people who assign condos are paying the appropriate income tax, capital gains and property transfer tax," the release says.


    The filing fee per assignment is $195, which the government says is a small fraction of the cost of flipping a condo unit.


    The register is one part of the New Democrat government's 30-Point Housing Plan to address housing affordability.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Documentary Highlights Parents' Struggles With Opioid-Addicted Kids

    Documentary Highlights Parents' Struggles With Opioid-Addicted Kids
    VANCOUVER — Watching paramedics revive their son from near death six times for the same condition that had him in the emergency room 13 times exhausted Jill and David Cory, but they kept hoping he'd get the help he needed to survive.

    Documentary Highlights Parents' Struggles With Opioid-Addicted Kids

    The Cannabis Act: 6 Things You need to Know

    The Cannabis Act: 6 Things You need to Know
    You must be of legal age (as defined by your province or territory) to buy, use or possess cannabis.

    The Cannabis Act: 6 Things You need to Know

    1 Man Dead Following Daytime Shooting In Surrey, Homicide Team Called

    1 Man Dead Following Daytime Shooting In Surrey, Homicide Team Called
    Homicide detectives are investigating a shooting that left one person dead in Surrey, B.C. today morning.

    1 Man Dead Following Daytime Shooting In Surrey, Homicide Team Called

    A Night of Community Achievements & Excellence

    The 9th Annual spectacular event took place on September 14, 2018, and was attended by over 700 guests in attendance.

    A Night of Community Achievements & Excellence

    Two Elderly Women In Hospital After Separate Vancouver Home Fires

    VANCOUVER — Two elderly women are in hospital, one with minor burns and the other suffering from smoke inhalation, after separate fires in Vancouver on Saturday.

    Two Elderly Women In Hospital After Separate Vancouver Home Fires

    Professor Fights Ban Amid Debate On Academic Freedom At B.C. University

    Professor Fights Ban Amid Debate On Academic Freedom At B.C. University
    VANCOUVER — A professor who has taken a stand against the publication of research in journals that aren't peer reviewed says he has been suspended from the campus of the university where he works in the Interior of British Columbia.

    Professor Fights Ban Amid Debate On Academic Freedom At B.C. University